Unlike Germany, Japan’s right still wrong on wartime history

It seems like there is no time like the present for Japanese to reflect on the wartime past. Japan’s shared history with Asia has long been a running sore, dividing Japanese about what happened and why, a discourse that clouds the issue of war responsibility in ways that antagonize East Asian neighbors who suffered most from Japanese aggression and subjugation.

WAR, GUILT, AND WORLD POLITICS AFTER WORLD WAR II, by Thomas U. Berger. Cambridge University Press, 2012, 259 pp., $29.99 (paperback)

So why are Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and other LDP lawmakers, along with Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto, reigniting Japan’s history problem at a time when regional tensions are running so high?

Thomas Berger has written a thoughtful and provocative analysis of how Germany, Austria and Japan have struggled to come to terms with the dark corners of their respective histories and how the discourse over war guilt and gestures of atonement have evolved in the post-1945 era. In each country the narrative of victimization proved far more appealing than assuming the burdens of victimizer. They were all “for long stretches of time strikingly impenitent about the terrible atrocities they had committed.”

Regarding the capacity to reinvent history, Berger slyly writes, “Austria’s greatest accomplishment in the twentieth century was to convince the world that Beethoven was Austrian and Hitler was German.” It was not until the 1990s that Austria abandoned the convenient myth of victimhood and assumed its share of responsibility for the worst crimes of the Third Reich. The growing international discourse about human rights and the desire to join the European Union created powerful pressures to adopt a more penitent stand on wartime history, but it was a very long battle against the comforts of collective amnesia.

While Germany is regarded as the model penitent, Berger examines the difficulties that politicians there overcame, the international developments that pushed this agenda and the fruitful reconciliation it made possible.

As in Japan, virtually every German city lay in ruins. Over 6.5 million Germans were killed in the war and there were 3 million Japanese war dead, explaining why the catastrophe endured overshadowed that inflicted. In both countries the extent of the horrors committed by their troops only became apparent after defeat and citizens did not feel as if they were responsible or had control over the actions of their governments. Postwar deprivation in both nations meant that there were more urgent matters than war guilt and even if there was anger against the governments that led them into disaster, there was also resentment about Allied atrocities that were left unaddressed by war crimes tribunals. These proceedings were aimed at convincing the general population of their nation’s guilt by prosecuting war criminals, but failed to do so because they were discredited as exercises in victor’s justice. They were seen to be validating pre-ordained verdicts, securing convictions based on laws that did not exist when the crimes were committed. Subsequent purges were beset with inconsistencies, reinforcing German and Japanese skepticism about the pursuit of accountability.

In trying to rebuild war-devastated nations, the Allies also had to tap the expertise of tainted elites, further fueling public cynicism. Berger points out that in the case of Japan, the decision to not prosecute Emperor Hirohito in exchange for his support of Allied reforms and the new Constitution, raised further questions since the war was waged in his name and with his approval.

Berger refers to Japan as the model impenitent. To the extent that Japan has apologized or adopted a more contrite official reckoning, such remorse is, “often undermined by the steady revisionist drumbeat emanating from the right.” Reconciliation remains elusive because, “Japan’s apologies have been limited in scope, challenged domestically, and singularly unsuccessful in improving Japan’s relations with its Asian neighbors.”

So why has Japan been relatively unremorseful about its misdeeds? Berger explains that rightists have a point, since Germany killed more, singled out entire groups of people for extermination and that documentary evidence on Japan’s atrocities is much poorer. In addition, Japan can somewhat plausibly argue that it was trying to free Asia from the yoke of Western imperialism, whereas Germany has no such ennobling fig-leaf. Attribution of responsibility in Japan is also murkier and diffuse, what Masao Maruyama termed the “structure of irresponsibility,” because there was no Hitler or Nazi Party. As a result, Japan has demonstrated, “a far more attenuated sense of guilt.” And the farce of justice served up by the Tokyo Trial did little to encourage a sense of moral culpability.

Moreover, many of the people who led Japan into the war came to “permeate the power structure” after the war; they had a vested interest in squelching a forthright reckoning. It has been more convenient to blame a clique of militarists for a misguided war, and from 1951 the Ministry of Education repeatedly intervened to whitewash the past depicted in textbooks.

Due to the Cold War, the U.S. sought Japan’s support and thus downplayed the history issue. The U.S. security presence and access to the vast U.S. market also meant that Japan did not have the same incentives and threats that motivated Germany to repent. In 1965 Japan struck a deal with South Korea, paying vast sums to bury the history problem and until the 1980s China took a “remarkably lenient stance on the issue of Japanese guilt.”

But the pluralization of public discourse in both countries since the 1980s, their growing economic power, and international trends on human rights norms transformed the terms of engagement over the past; Japan’s minimal contrition was no longer tenable. For the right, the quandary is how to pursue the national interest in the region by expressing sincere contrition and embracing grand gestures of atonement without sacrificing their desire to bolster pride in nation and patriotism.

Thus identity politics plays havoc with history and reconciliation. In this context, we can understand the purposeful questioning of apologies about aggression and the comfort women and why conservatives still seek a dubious dignity in denial and obfuscation, unconvincing and self-defeating as such efforts may be.

Jeff Kingston is the director of Asian Studies at Temple University, Japan Campus.

Books

Although it may not mitigate the problem of the lack of contrition in Japanese politics, I believe it is also important to keep in mind that although mirroring Japan with Germany in terms of contrition may seem like a fair comparison, it is actually the German case, rather than the Japanese case that is peculiar. According to Jennifer Lind, considering the large amount of countries which have never apologized for atrocities or human rights violations, the question how Germany COULD apologize is more interesting than why Japan could not. For more more info, read her article “The Perils of Apology” in Foreign Affairs (2009).

Sandman

I don`t think the rightists have a point… Even if Germany killed many more Japan would still be in the wrong (as would the allies in many circumstances). Additionally, how many more did Germany kill? Japan are estimated to have killed between 3 and 10 million in China alone…

http://www.reginald-gruenenberg.de/ Reginald Grünenberg

Thank
you for this review, Berger’s book seems to be very interesting. Being German
myself, I have been waiting for long for such a comparison. The average
Japanese is totally ignorant of the atrocities committed during WW II. In
the light of 20 million victims in Asia, most of them not being killed in
battle, the focus on the despicable but finally rather bloodless treatment of
the comfort women is a just another bad joke. I believe with Herbert Bix that
it was a major mistake by the U.S.-Forces to keep Hirohito in power. It’s like
Hitler had become the first President of the new Federal Republic of Germany in
1949 in order not to confuse the poor Germans emotionally. BTW, I appreciate
very much Joost Kralt’s comment an will read the recommended paper.

http://thehopefulmonster.wordpress.com/ Sublight

“Unlike Germany, Japan’s right still wrong on wartime history”

The headline is telling: Germany is judged by the actions of its mainstream, while Japan is judged by its extremists. For a fairer comparison, shouldn’t the parallels be drawn between Japan’s rightists and their counterparts in the growing anti-immigrant movements in Germany and Austria?

Kingston states that “It was not until the 1990s that Austria abandoned the convenient myth of
victimhood and assumed its share of responsibility for the worst crimes
of the Third Reich,” yet that was exactly when noted Nazi sympathizer Jorg Haider was rising to prominence on a wave of anti-immigrant, anti-foreigner popular support. Why is that brushed aside while Japan’s apologies being “undermined by the steady revisionist drumbeat emanating from the right” is accepted as evidence that the nation as a whole is uniformly unrepentant?

One standard, please.

NonpartisanVoice

Is your argument of ‘one standard’ to suggest that the U.S. should have executed all involved Japanese Imperial leaders post victory? Or is your standard suggesting that Japan is right in its approach of white washing the atrocities committed? If its the latter, the one standard for mainstream purposes is to criminalize any statements that would question historical facts. After all, isn’t anti-semitism a crime?

Do us a favor, if you are going to argue suggesting marginalization is unfair then examine the root cause. Don’t attempt to justify the atrocities by focusing on the populace when governments are the representatives of the people. Maybe if Japan was not a democratic country, I would agree. Your argument suggests Japanese elected officials do not represent the country.

alnsmith

I look forward to reading the book, although judging by this review, it seems to be covering the same ground so fluently thoroughly covered by Ian Buruma in his 1994 book, The Wages of Guilt: Memories of War in Germany and Japan. Buruma is fluent in both languages, and did a masterful job of connecting all the cultural, as well as historical and political, dots that explain the differences in how the two countries remember the war differently. It came out just in time for the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the war, and I wonder that publishers aren’t simply dusting it off and reissuing it again. It would take a herculean effort on Professor Berger’s part to outshine Buruma’s definitive work.